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PoliticsAnalysis

How NDP, Liberals are helping Stephen Harper exceed expectations on the economy

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair is fond of saying Stephen Harper is the only Canadian prime minster that gets to ask "Which one?" when asked about a recession in his mandate. The line plays well with the Conservative leader's detractors, but there's increasing evidence it may not be true.

StatsCan could revise its numbers, making the NDP and Liberal economic warnings moot

Conservative Leader Stephen Harper was hammered by his rivals after Statistics Canada reported the country had slipped into a recession. What will they say if the numbers are adjusted to show that didn't happen? (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Conservatives appear to begearing up to celebrate news the economy is stagnant,becausethat would be considered good tidingscompared with the picture their opponents have painted.

NDP Leader TomMulcair has a line he'sfond of saying:"Stephen Harper is the only prime minister inCanadian history who,when asked about the recession during his mandate, gets to say,'Which one?'"

The line plays well with the Conservative leader's detractors. It's short, punchy, easilygrasped however, there's increasing evidence it may not be true.

"I don't believe we were everin a recession," Harper said in an interview this week.

His nowrarelyseenfinance minister made similar comments on the same day in an interview with The Associated Press.

"We don't believe that the economy was, in fact, in a recession," Joe Oliver said.

Rewriting history

Liberals were quick to pounce on the comments.

They attacked Oliver in a media release, saying he "can't rewrite history."

Here's the odd thing though about economics: historyisrewritten all the time.

StatisticsCanada regularly revises its economic reports.

It's normal practiceas more information becomes available and survey participants revise their own numbers originally provided to the agency.

In fact, StatisticsCanada revised its own figures on Sept.1when it "confirmed," as the NDP and Liberals put it, atechnicalrecession for the first half of the year.

"Real gross domestic product (GDP) declined 0.1 per centin the second quarter, following a 0.2 per centdecline in the first quarter," the report states.

No mention of the fact it had just subtly doubled the decline for the first quarter. Why? Because this is normal.

For those who really, really like to delve into the numbers, StatisticsCanada recently introduced a new feature: "vintage data."

In one handy table the agency provides each of the revisions it has made to certain data points.

This one shows the GDP numbers originally reported going back to August 2014 and the revisions since.

The second quarter of that year, for example, was revised up by 0.8 per cent over the course of a couple of months before settling on a revision 0.7 per cent.

Sound like a small difference?

The definition of a technical recession was met because Statistics Canada reported the second quarter of 2015 shrank by 0.1 per cent.

Ifin the report to be released next week the first quarter is reviseddown by that much, or the second quarter up by that much, or the first quarter down by 0.05 per cent and the second quarter up by 0.05 per cent that technical recession shouted from the rooftopsby Harper's opponents for the last several weeks disappears.

In the know

The hints by Harper and Oliver that this may well be the case ought not be dismissed as wishful thinking.

Both remain in their respective cabinet positions during the campaign and members of the Privy Council.

As such, they retainaccess to the information gathered by government agencies, including Statistics Canada as it prepares next week's report.

In highlighting his discussions with the governor of the Bank of Canada during this campaign,Harper hasalready remindedCanadians that he remains in regular contact with those whose hands are on the levers of the economy and have the most current information available about it.

None of this is to suggest the Conservatives have "cooked the books" in any way to allowwhat all politicians hope to do:under-promise and over-deliver.

The NDP and Liberals set the expectations for the governing party;all it's had to do is sit back and watch the numbers trickle out.

The margins of error under debate have always been so narrow that, in economic terms, there really isn't a difference whether the numbers are positive or negative.

It's similar to the posturing on whether the federal government was in surplus or deficit last year.

Much political hay was made as to whether the government posted a $2-billion deficit or a $1.9-billion surplus, butthere was little acknowledgement the difference amounts to a margin of error of plus or minus 0.3 per cent of the budget.

Exceeding expectations

The NDP and Liberals hammered the Conservatives repeatedly in the early days of the campaign for running "eight consecutive budget deficits."

The numbers now show that's likely untrue.

Which means Harper now gets to campaign on his economic success because only six of his government's 10 budgets were in deficit.

The NDP and Liberals have warnedvotersrepeatedly that Harper has led us into another recession.

It's looking increasingly likely the numbers won't bear that out, and theConservatives will be able to boast (weakly) that Canada's economy was flat in the first half of the year.

It's reminiscent of the debate that often takes place at Environment Canada long after the factas to whether a particularly violent storm met the technical requirements of a tornado.

It matters to those who study such phenomena, but less so to those picking up the debris afterone heck of a storm.